Sunday, May 14, 2006

Nihilism Amongst The Jewish Occupation Army

This is some hilarious news I got from the Final Conflict email list. If true, then it would seem that secular Israel is facing similiar problems, nihilism and satanism and homosexuality and all, facing the West in general..Ha-Ha!

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OCCUPIED PALESTINE: NEO-NAZI SKINHEADS? AYE CARUMBA!

[politicalsoldier.net says: Mr. Hoffman overlooks one aspect of this, and that is the growth of Black Metal and other nihilist groups in Israel.
How unfortunate to see these types, whom the politicians, entertainment industry et al are happy to see operate in Europe and America where they sometimes attack Churches or engage in nihilst behaviour designed to outrage, operate in Israel where the only 'religious' places they can get to in their own areas are, of course, mosques.
No doubt some ethnic Russian or quasi-Russian types may have a perceived racial motive too...
Seems the chosenites are not free from the detrimental effects of their own industries in Hollywood, New York and elsewhere -- and I guess there is some comfort to be gained from that! Now if only the 'black Jews' from Africa who managed to get to israel could start gangs, drive-by shootings, muggings etc... that would be the cherry on the cake!]:

THE HOFFMAN WIRE
Dedicated to Freedom of the Press, Investigative Reporting and Revisionist History
Subscribe: HoffmanWire-subscribe@topica.com
Michael A. Hoffman II, Editor
"Neo-Nazi Gangs" Operating in "Israel"
EDITOR'S NOTE: A few years ago an American contact of mine who visits
occupied Palestine regularly, conveyed a fascinating speculation: that
many of the Russian "Jews" who were entering the Israeli state were
actually crypto-gentiles and that this was eventually going to prove to
be a time bomb for the Israelis.
His observation would seem to be confirmed by the startling news that
"neo-Nazi skinheads" are operating within "Israel"! Given their famous
penchant for blowing everything out of proportion, the Israelis are
probably exaggerating the extent of the threat (they relish
victimization), but even if only half of this story is true, the
Israelis now have a dangerous fifth-column festering in the very bowels
of their nation. Of course, some would say that a neo-Nazi gang has been
operating in occupied Palestine for years: the Israeli Army.

FEAR AND LOATHING IN PETAH TIKVA
NEO-NAZI GANGS ASSAULTING ULTRA-ORTHODOX JEWS
By Moti Katz
Haaretz May 11, 2006
A week after the desecration of the Great Synagogue in Petah Tikva,
nothing remains of the horror the worshipers encountered there last
Thursday when they arrived for morning prayers. The walls, which had
been sprayed with swastikas and blasphemy, have been newly painted, the
floor polished and the curtain covering the holy ark replaced.
However, the danger is far from over. For the past two years the
ultra-Orthodox community there, which includes some 5,000 families and
300 synagogues, has been subjected to incessant attacks by street gangs
from the former Soviet Union (FSU). The gangs have been beating
ultra-Orthodox men, hurling curses at them and desecrating synagogues.
"These youths feel out of place in the Russian community they belong to,
but they are not accepted in Israeli society either," says Bella
Alexandrov, the director of the multi-disciplinary youth center in Petah
Tikva. She distinguishes between two kinds of immigrants - punks and
skinheads.
"The skinheads buy Russian videos about 'white power' that call for
cleansing Russia of Jews. They don't get it from home. It comes from not
belonging and not finding answers to their distress."
On Sukkot eve last year, a number of teens bearing knives burst into the
big Lithuanian yeshiva, "Or Israel" on Rothschild Street in the city
center. They started beating pupils, and throwing prayer books and
scriptures on the floor.
Yeshiva head Rabbi Yigal Rozen has no doubt that these incidents are
anti-Semitic.
"There has always been violence in Israel, but never directed at
synagogues. This started only in recent years. A month after the Sukkot
incident, two yeshiva students were attacked and beaten up by Russian
teens. The police arrested three of the attackers," he says. Most of
the victims were dressed like ultra-Orthodox Jews, Rozen says, and
therefore concludes that the assailants could not be Jewish.
"It's time the police realized these are anti-Semitic attacks. These
gangs are not after money. The charity boxes were not robbed, nor were
the Torah books, which are worth a fortune," he says.
Many of the incidents occur in the parks in the city center because
numerous low-income immigrant families from Russia live there, says
Rahamim Arbel, Jewish cultural coordinator for Petah Tikva's community
centers. "On Friday nights Russian teens gather in parks with lots of
alcohol and bongs. It's very unpleasant for the residents of the
neighborhood," he says.
Arbel himself was attacked two years ago. He was with his small son and
two friends, and they were returning from a lesson. On Rothschild street
they were accosted by a group of drunk teenage boys and girls, aged 15
to 16.
"They started swearing at us. I whispered to the others to walk away.
The girls ran after us spitting and kicking. We fled. I got over it but
my son will never forget that day," he recalls.
An elderly man was attacked on Friday night a year ago but did not go to
the police.
"I live in the center, near a park where the Russian gangs gather on
Friday nights. Returning from a family visit I approached the park," he
says. "A few boys demanded money and threatened me with a broken bottle.
I told them I had no money because it was the Sabbath and went on
walking. They knocked my hat off, kicked my shin and started kicking my
hat. I tried to run and they followed me, cursing and throwing empty
beer bottles. They were definitely harassing me because of my religious
dress, because others passed by undisturbed," he says.
"My parents survived the Holocaust. I come from exile and know what
persecution is; and that's what I felt. Their appearance and the chains
around their necks reminded me of neo-Nazis," he says.
Acting Mayor Paltiel Eisental tries to be reassuring. The relations
between the city's secular and religious residents are very good, he
says. This is a small gang, not a widespread trend, he says.
"You must distinguish between vandalism due to theft and what happened
in the Great Synagogue last week, which was brutality and hatred. I
don't believe Jews could have done that. Those were acts aimed against a
nation, against an idea. It's Nazism," he says.
The city council held an emergency meeting last week after the
synagogue's desecration, and decided to safeguard the synagogue and find
the vandals and indict them. Eisental says the city has a vandalism
patrol in problem areas, but is having trouble reinforcing it due to a
personnel shortage.
"Every Hanukkah we put a nice big menorah at the yeshiva's entrance,
right on the street," says Rabbi Rozen. "This year we were forced to put
a security camera on it so that it wouldn't be vandalized," he adds
sadly.

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1 Comments:

Blogger Hellenian said...

The Final Conflict commentary is indeed hilarious, especially the part that reads:

"Now if only the 'black Jews' from Africa who managed to get to israel could start gangs, drive-by shootings, muggings etc... that would be the cherry on the cake!"

1:09 PM  

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